Please Join the Abbe Museum for its Annual Meeting!
Friday, September 26, 2025
5:00 - 7:00 p.m.
26 Mount Desert Street | Bar Harbor, Maine
BAR HARBOR—Enjoy food and beverages alongside the Abbe trustees and staff while we update you on the museum and introduce our newest trustees.
Following these updates, we will be joined for a talk from Jordan Bennett, Mi’kmaq, the visual artist behind our exhibit Mi’kmaw Tepgunsejig - 13 Moons Full Suite on view until October 31, 2025.
About Jordan Bennett:
Jordan Bennett is L’nu (Mi’kmaq), from Stephenville Crossing, Newfoundland (Ktaqmkuk). He currently works and lives in Kjipuktuk (Halifax, NS).
Having a methodology that is deeply guided by the Land of his ancestors, his ongoing work possesses qualities of familiarity that can serve as a connection for a wide range of audiences spanning culture and generation. His work, though not always directly challenging colonial perceptions of Indigenous histories and presence, lends itself to discussions regarding contemporary Indigenous realities within urban and rural communities. His ongoing practice utilizes sculpture, painting, video, immersive installations, and sound to explore land, language, the act of visiting and his familial histories. Bennett currently holds the position of Associate Professor, Expanded Media at NSCAD University. He received his BFA from Memorial University (Grenfell Campus) 2008, and an MFA from the University of British Columbia Okangan, 2016. Since 2008 he has exhibited extensively nationally and internationally in over 100 group and solo shows as well as created multiple public art commissions throughout Canada.
Jordan continues to explore, collaborate, share, and mentor within his practice as these have become the pillars of his artistic and community-based work. Bennett has been the recipient of several awards and honours, most notably shortlisted for the 2018 Sobey Art Award; a Long list winner of the 2020 Sobey Art Award, the 2020 winner of the Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia Masterworks Arts Award for his 100-foot installation “Tepkik”; represented Newfoundland and Labrador at the 2015 Venice Biennale’s collateral events and was named the 2014 Newfoundland and Labrador Art’s Council’s Artist of the Year.


